WHAT YOU OWE – INTERSTATE TELECOMMUNICATIONS

SERVICE PROVIDERS (ITSP) FOR FY 2015

Each year, the Commission is required to collect regulatory fees. Licensees and regulatees are assessed fees as set forth in Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2015,Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, (released September 2, 2015) (“FY 2015 Regulatory Fees, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking”). The Commission also publishes industry-specific guidance in Who Owes Fees & What Is My FY 2015 Fee, which can be found on the Commission website at .

The Commission’s automated filing and payment system (“Fee Filer”) is available for filing and viewing of FY 2015 regulatory fees. While FY 2015 regulatory fees will not become effective until the rulemaking is published in the Federal Register, regulatees at their own discretion, may submit payments at any time before the effective due date of FY 2015 regulatory fees.Regulatory fee payments must be RECEIVED [1] by the Commission no later than 11:59 PM, Eastern Daylight Time, on September 24, 2015.

This Fact Sheet provides information for interstate telecommunications service providers (ITSPs) to help them prepare and pay their regulatory fees. ITSPs typically identify themselves on FCC Form 499-A filings as offering service in one or more of the following categories:[2]

All Distance -- provides fixed local exchange services and interstate long distance services to end users for a flat rate (may also include intrastate toll).

Audio Bridging (Teleconferencing) Provider - Allows end users to transmit a call (using telephone lines), to a point specified by the user (the conference bridge), without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received (voice transmission).

CAP/CLEC (Competitive Access Provider/Competitive Local Exchange Carrier) -- competes with incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) to provide local exchange services, or telecommunications services that link customers with interexchange facilities, local exchange networks, or other customers, other than coaxial cable providers.

Coaxial Cable -- uses coaxial cable (cable TV) facilities to provide local exchange services or telecommunications services that link customers with interexchange facilities, local exchange networks, or other customers.

Incumbent LEC -- provides local exchange services. An incumbent LEC generally is a carrier that was at one time franchised as a monopoly service provider. See 47 U.S.C. §251(h).

Interconnected VoIP provider – provides “interconnected VoIP service” as that term is defined in 47 CFR §9.3.

Interexchange Carrier (IXC) -- provides long distance telecommunications services substantially through switches or circuits that it owns or leases.

Local Reseller -- provides local exchange or fixed telecommunications services by reselling services of other carriers.

Operator Service Provider (OSP) -- serves customers needing the assistance of an operator to complete calls, or needing alternate billing arrangements such as collect calling.

Other Local and Other Toll Service Providers -- other providers of local exchange or toll services, including private service providers (those offering telecommunications services to others, including companies that offer excess capacity on a private system used primarily for internal purposes) and VoIP Toll providers, which use IP technology to facilitate calls that originate and terminate on the public switched network and which undergo no net protocol conversion.

Payphone Service Provider -- provides customers access to telephone networks through payphone equipment, special teleconference rooms, etc. Payphone service providers also are referred to as payphone aggregators.

Prepaid Calling Card Provider -- provides prepaid calling card services by selling prepaid calling cards to the public or to retailers. Prepaid card providers typically resell the toll service of other carriers and determine the price of the service by setting the price of the card and controlling the number of minutes that can be used by the card.

Private Service Provider -- offers telecommunications to others for a fee on a non-common carrier basis. This would include a company that offers excess capacity on a private system that it uses primarily for internal purposes. This category does not include Specialized Mobile Radio operators.

Shared-Tenant Service Provider /Building LEC -- manages or owns a multi-tenant location that provides telecommunications services or facilities to the tenants for a fee.

Stand-Alone Audio Bridging Provider/Integrated Teleconferencing Service Provider – allows end users to transmit a voice call over telephone lines to a point specified by the user (the conference bridge), without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received.

Toll Reseller -- provides long distance telecommunications services primarily by reselling the long distance telecommunications services of other carriers.

In its FY 1996 Regulatory Fee Report and Order, the Commission amended its rule regarding the Telecommunications Relay Service Fund administrator to permit the National Exchange Carrier Association (NECA) to process regulatory fees on behalf of its pooling exchange carriers and to submit their consolidated fees to our lockbox bank in a single payment instrument. However, entities subject to regulatory fee payment should be reminded that the regulatee, not an agent such as NECA, is responsible for ensuring that payment is made, and that there is a penalty for not submitting the entire fee in a timely manner.

Fee Payment Amount and Payment Type Code for ITSPs

Fee Payment Amount: $0.00331 per dollar of subject revenue

Payment Type Code: 1572

Regulatory Fee Obligation and FCC Form 499-A

This Fact Sheet provides information for ITSP providers to prepare and to pay their ITSP regulatory fees. As in prior years, ITSP providers in FY 2015 will not receive a pre-completed regulatory fee bill (FCC Form 159-B) in the mail from the Commission. An ITSP regulatory fee bill will be created, but this bill will be available for viewing only by accessing Fee Filer at ITSP providers are also required to make regulatory fee payments for all other fee categories. The ITSP bill that is accessible in Fee Filer is based on information that was provided on FCC Form 499-A, which was due on April 1, 2015, and includes revised 499-A filings processed through August 10, 2015.

ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW TOLL FREE NUMBER (TFN)

REGULATORY FEE BEGINNING IN FY 2015

Beginning in FY 2015, the Commission has instituted a Toll Free Number (TFN) regulatory fee to be paid by Responsible Organizations (RespOrg) based on their toll free number count as of December 31, 2014.[3] The Commission will identify the count based on data provided by SMS/800, the administrator of toll free numbers. RespOrgs will not need to determine their toll free number count; the quantity field will be pre-populated in the Fee Filer system. To view your toll free number counts and pay the fees, RespOrgs will need to log into the Commission’s Fee Filer web application system ( with the proper FRN (FCC Registration Number) and password. If you do not have an FRN, please log into the Commission’s CORES system to register and obtain one. If you already have an FRN, but do not know which FRN the Commission is using to establish the regulatory fee bill, please contact 877-480-3201, Option 4 (8:00 am – 6:00 pm, ET) for additional information.

Some RespOrgs may have a toll free number regulatory fee obligation of $500 or less. If the sum total of all regulatory fees owed, including the amount for the toll free number regulatory fee, is $500 or less, you are considered to be de minimis and are not subject to the payment of FY 2015 regulatory fees (see paragraph below). Also, a number of RespOrgs are listed as non-U.S. entities (e.g. Canadian). Because it is difficult to determine which of the toll free numbers held by non-U.S. RespOrgs are accessible to the United States, the Commission has determined that in FY 2015 non-U.S. RespOrgs are not subject to the Toll Free Number regulatory fee. In the future, as toll free number data is determined with great specificity, the Commission may assess fees on non-U.S. RespOrgs, but in FY 2015, non-U.S. RespOrgs will not be subject to the toll free number regulatory fee.

Fee Payment Amount and Payment Type Code for the Toll Free Number Regulatory Fee

Fee Payment Amount: $0.12 per Toll Free Number

Payment Type Code: 1591

MANDATORY USE OF FEE FILER

The use of the online Fee Filer system for filing regulatory fees has not changed since the process was first initiated in FY 2009: licensees and regulatees must first enter the Commission’s Fee Filer system with a valid FRN and password, and follow the online prompts to review their data and submit an electronic fee payment. Use of the online Fee Filer system is mandatory, and payments in the form of checks, money orders, and cashier’s checks are no longer accepted. [4] In making a wire transfer, please fax the “Wire Transfer Instructions” from Fee Filer to the Federal Communications Commission at (202) 418-2843 at least one hour before initiating the wire transfer (but on the same business day) so as not to delay crediting their account. These Wire Transfer Instructions contain valuable information (e.g. FRN, Voucher Number, Payer Name, and the Amount of the Wire) that will help to post the payment more quickly, and avoid costly delays that could result in penalties and interest for missing the payment due date. Please note that most wire transfers initiated after 6:00 p.m. (EDT) will be credited the next business day. Complete instructions for making wire payments are posted at

To Begin the Process:

To begin the process of filing your FY 2015ITSP regulatory fee, please access the FCC’s Fee Filer web application located at:

ITSP providers may incorporate within a single payment the ITSP fee and any other regulatory fee that is owed. After logging into Fee Filer with the FRN associated with the ITSP regulatory fee, a pre-completed worksheet resembling a Form 159-W will be presented.

After logging into Fee Filer, ITSP providers will have an opportunity to electronically edit the pre-completed ITSP worksheet. Upon completion of the edits, the provider can pay electronically.

PLEASENOTE: Please note that if the Form 159-W worksheet is revised, it is the responsibility of the ITSP provider to file a revised 499-A form with USAC. Until this revised 499-A form is filed with USAC, the Commission will continue to use the 499-A form upon which the regulatory fee bill was created as the official regulatory fee amount due.

Payment methods for electronic filings:

  • Online Credit Card via Fee Filer (see paragraph below on limits to credit card transactions)
  • Online ACH Debit from Bank Account, via Fee Filer
  • Wire Transfer (preceded by a faxed ((202) 418-2843)) copy of a Fee Filer-generated “Wire Transfer Instructions" see for full instructions.)

LIMITATIONS ON CREDIT CARD TRANSACTIONS

In accordance with U.S. Treasury Announcement No. A-2014-04 (July 2014), the amount that can be charged on a credit card for transactions with federal agencies has been reduced to $24,999.99.[5] Previously, the credit card limit was $49,999.99. This lower transaction amount is effective June 1, 2015. Transactions greater than $24,999.99 will be rejected. This limit applies to single payments or bundled payments of more than one bill. Multiple transactions to a single agency in one day may be aggregated and treated as a single transaction subject to the $24,999.99 limit. Customers who wish to pay an amount greater than $24,999.99 should consider available electronic alternatives such as Visa or MasterCard debit cards, ACH debits from a bank account, and wire transfers. Each of these payment options is available after filing regulatory fee information in Fee Filer. Further details will be provided regarding payment methods and procedures at the time of FY 2015 regulatory fee collectionin Fact Sheets, available at

Regulatory fee payments that exceed the U.S. Treasury limit and are rejected by Treasury, causing a payment not to meet the required payment deadline, will be subject to interest, fees, and a 25% late payment penalty.

NEW DE MINIMIS REGULATORY FEE LEVEL

Regulatees whose total FY 2015 annual regulatory fee liability, including all categories of fees for which payment is due, is $500 or less are exempt from payment of FY 2015 regulatory fees. The de minimis threshold applies only to filers of annual regulatory fees (not regulatory fees paid through multi-year filings), and it is not a permanent exemption. Rather, each regulate will need to reevaluate their total fee liability each fiscal year to determine whether they meet the de minimis exemption. Regulatees are responsible for calculating their own total fee obligation to determine whether they qualify for this de minimis exemption. The Commission reserves the right to request documentation that supports a de minimis exemption claim.

Corrections to ITSP Worksheet

De Minimis Fee Exemption ($500 or Less): Please review the information on the 159-W worksheet to ensure that the data used to calculate the fee amount is correct. If the data is correct and the total regulatory fee obligation, including the ITSP fee and all other FCC regulatory fees obligations, is $500 or less, then no FY 2015 regulatory fee is due. If this is the case, there is no need to respond to the Commission regarding the ITSP regulatory fee.

Frequently Asked Questions:

Question 1. What is the FCC Form 499-A Telecommunications Reporting Worksheet?

As required under the Communications Act of 1934, as amended,[6] the Commission has established, in a series of separate proceedings, procedures to finance interstate telecommunications relay services (TRS), universal service support mechanisms, administration of the North American Numbering Plan (NANPA), and shared costs of local number portability (LNPA). To accomplish these Congressional directed objectives, contributions are collected from all telecommunications carriers providing interstate telecommunications and certain other providers of telecommunications. In 1999, the Commission amended its rules so that for the purpose of determining their contribution(s), contributors to these mechanisms need only file the FCC Form 499-A Telecommunications Reporting Worksheet[.][7] The FCC Form 499-A is filed by interstate service providers each year on April 1. A copy of the form and instructions can be downloaded at

Question 2. Which companies must file an FCC Form 499-A?

All providers of telecommunications and Interconnected VoIP services within the United States, with very limited exceptions, must file an FCC Form 499-A.[8] For this purpose, the United States is defined as the contiguous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, American Samoa, Baker Island, Guam, Howland Island, Jarvis Island, Johnston Atoll, Kingman Reef, Midway Island, Navassa Island, the Northern Mariana Islands, Palmyra, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Wake Island. As a general matter, each legal entity that provides interstate telecommunications and Interconnected VoIP services for a fee, including each affiliate or subsidiary of an entity, must complete separately and file a copy of the FCC Form 499-A. The Commission, however, has adopted an exception to the separate legal-entity requirement, which enables contributors meeting certain criteria to file the FCC Form 499-A on a consolidated basis.

For purposes of determining whether an entity provides telecommunications, please note that the term "telecommunications" means the transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user's choosing, without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received. For the purpose of filing, the term "interstate telecommunications" includes, but is not limited to, the following types of services: wireless telephony including cellular and personal communications services (PCS); paging and messaging services; dispatch services; mobile radio services; operator services; access to interexchange service; interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service, special access; wide area telecommunications services (WATS); subscriber toll-free services; 900 services; message telephone services (MTS); private line; telex; telegraph; video services; satellite services; and resale services. Note, for example, that all local exchange carriers provide access services and, therefore, provide interstate telecommunications. “Interconnected VoIP service” is defined in 47 CFR §9.3.

Note: Entities that offer interstate telecommunications and Interconnected VoIP services for a fee to the public, even if only to a narrow or limited class of users that utilize their services, must file the FCC Form 499-A and are subject to the universal service contribution requirement. This includes entities that provide interstate telecommunications to entities other than themselves for a fee on a private, contractual basis. In addition, owners of pay telephones, sometimes referred to as "pay telephone aggregators," must file this worksheet. Most telecommunications carriers must file this worksheet even if they qualify for the de minimis exemption under the Commission's rules for universal service[.][9]

Question 3. Should all FCC Form 499-A filers also pay ITSP regulatory fees?

No. Interstate service providers that have mobile service or satellite service revenues but that do not have interstate local revenues or interstate toll revenuesare exempt from payment of ITSP fees. Interstate service providers that provide service to only other carriers are also exempt from paying ITSP regulatory fees. Governmental entities and entities that are tax exempt under §501 of the Internal Revenue Code are exempt. Carriers whose total regulatory fee payment obligation is $500 or less are also exempt. However, the vast majority of FCC Form 499-A filers are required to pay ITSP regulatory fees.

Question 4. Should a carrier make a regulatory fee payment if it has not filed an FCC Form 499-A?

Yes. If a telecommunications or Interconnected VoIP service provider offered interstate telecommunications services in 2014, then it should have filed an FCC Form 499-A, and pay the appropriate regulatory fee payment. The FCC Form 499-A was due on April 1, 2015 and should have contained revenue information for calendar year 2014. Carriers which have not yet filed the FCC Form 499-A should contact the Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) at (888) 641-8722 in order to obtain a filing package and to be assigned a 6-digit Filer 499 ID number. If a carrier has forgotten its Filer 499 ID, it may contact USAC at (888) 641-8722, or it may access the Commission’s online carrier Locator: